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The Catherine Wheel
When particles of different sizes fall in an avalanche, they separate out by size. Smaller particles form one layer with another layer of larger particles over the top. This happens because the smaller particles tend to fall in between the larger ones, similar to the percolation theory in the Brazil nut effect. In a slowly…
Hydrofoils and Stability
Today’s fastest boats use hydrofoils to lift most of a boat’s hull out of the water. This greatly reduces the drag a boat experiences, but it can also make the boat difficult to handle. One style of hydrofoil boat, called a single-track hydrofoil, uses two hydrofoils in line with one another to support and steer…
Colorful Erosion
Wind, water, and gravity are great sculptors of our world. This false-color satellite image shows the Ga’ara Depression in Iraq, which formed some 300 million years ago beneath a shallow sea. The steep cliffs along the southern edge of the depression continue moving southward as they’re eroded by wind and run-off. When infrequent but intense…
Can Zooplankton Mix Oceans?
Krill and other tiny marine zooplankton make daily migrations to and from the ocean surface. Previously, models of ocean mixing ignored these migrations; these animals are tiny, researchers argued, so any effects they could have would be too small to matter. But zooplankton make these migrations in huge swarms, and studies of a laboratory analog…
“Flowers and Colors”
Many children have done the simple experiment of placing a cut flower in dyed water and watching as it changed color. The latest video from Beauty of Science relies on some related physics. Since the color of flowers typically depends on acidity, immersing a flower in dilute acid will change its color from pinks and…
Bubble Trains in a Microchannel
Trains of bubbles flowing through a microchannel get distorted by periodic expansions and constrictions. In these images, flow is from left to right, and the narrow point of the channel is about 250 microns across. In narrow regions, the front of the bubble tends to move faster, while in wider areas, the back of the…
The Disintegrating Splash
A drop of blue-dyed glycerine impacts a thin film of isopropanol, creating a spectacular splash and breakup. The drop’s impact flings a layer of the isopropanol into the air, where air currents make the thin sheet buckle inward and break into a spray of droplets. Meanwhile, the liquid from the drop forms a thick, blue…
Snowmelt
Much of the rain that falls on Earth began as snow high in the atmosphere. As it falls through warmer layers of air, the snowflakes melt and form water droplets. The details of this melting process have been difficult to capture experimentally, but a new computational model may provide insight. The basic process has a…
Skyglow
Timelapse can be a beautiful way to highlight slow-moving flows like those in the sky. But it can also be valuable in showing differences in speed, as in the latest SKYGLOW Project video, “Colorado Serenade”, which shows the Colorado River and the skies overhead simultaneously. Timelapse highlights the difference in time scales between the fast-moving river…
Happy 2000 Posts!
Happy Friday and happy 2000th FYFD post! To celebrate, I played with surface tension and the Marangoni effect to make some art. For a run-down on the physics, check out this previous post on water calligraphy. Two thousand posts feels like a major milestone. Not everyone realizes this, but FYFD is a one-woman operation, so…